<p>Is there any noble prize receiver--professor teaching undergraduates in CAL?</p>
<p>most professors here are very noble, so i would say yes, many</p>
<p>HAHAHAHAHA! Nobel Laureates almost never teach undergrad courses. Not at Berkeley, or anywhere else.</p>
<p>Smoot taught Physics</p>
<p>Don’t talk when you don’t know it. You know who you are.
Smoot indeed taught Physics 7B in Fall 2008.</p>
<p>Smoot is the exception, not the rule. Universities will rarely compel their more distinguished faculty to spend their time on undergraduate pedagogy and rather than research.</p>
<p>Smoot taught physics.</p>
<p>Note, and be glad for, the past tense.</p>
<p>I would have had to take him had Ramesh not taken over.</p>
<p>It’s a little funny that people care, except for slight inspirational purposes. </p>
<p>But anyway, Borcherds is a fields medalist, which is in the eyes of many likely harder to get than the awards you’re talking of, and he routinely teaches calculus to frosh.</p>
<p>jones is also a fields medalist, and he’s my math 1b prof. hilarious guy too</p>
<p>I switched into Ramesh for reasons that are neither good nor particularly bad.</p>
<p>I’m not sure if I regret it.</p>